Appendix A to Part 74 - Declarations of Eligibility by Persons Identified by the Office of Redress Administration and Requests for Documentation
28:2.0.1.1.27.7.1.1.12 : Appendix A
Appendix A to Part 74 - Declarations of Eligibility by Persons
Identified by the Office of Redress Administration and Requests for
Documentation Form A: Declaration of Eligibility by Persons
Identified by the Office of Redress Administration U.S. Department
of Justice Civil Rights Division Office of Redress Administration
This declaration shall be executed by the identified eligible
person or such person's designated representative.
Complete the following information:
(1) Current Legal Name: (2) Current Address: Street: City, State
and Zip Code: (3) Telephone Number: (Home) (Business) (4) Social
Security Number: (5) Date of Birth: (6) Name Used When Evacuated or
Interned:
Read the following carefully before signing this document. A
False Statement may be grounds for punishment by fine (U.S. Code,
title 31, section 3729), and fine or imprisonment or both (U.S.
Code, title 18, section 287 and section 1001).
I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true
and correct.
Signature Date
Privacy Act Statement: The authority for collecting this
information is contained in 50 U.S.C. app. 1989b. The information
that you provide will be used principally for verifying eligible
persons for payment under the restitution provision of the Civil
Liberties Act of 1988.
Required Documentation: The following documentation must be
submitted with the above Declaration to complete your
verification.
DOCUMENTATION: I. Identification
A document with your current legal name and address. For
example, you might send a bank or financial statement, or a monthly
utility bill. Submit either a notarized copy of the record or an
original that you do not need back.
II.
One Document of Date of Birth
A certified copy of a birth certificate or a copy of another
record of birth that has been certified by the custodian of the
records. For example, you might send a religious record which shows
your date of birth, or a hospital birth record. If you do not have
any record of your birth the Administrator will accept affidavits
of two or more persons attesting to the date of your birth.
If your notification letter says that the Social Security
Administration has confirmed your date of birth, you do not
have to send us any further evidence of your birth date.
III.
One Document of Name Change
If your current legal name is the same as your name when
evacuated or interned, this section does not apply.
This section is only required for persons whose current legal
name is different from the name used when evacuated or
interned.
1. A certified copy of the public record of marriage.
2. A certified copy of the divorce decree.
3. A certified copy of the court order of a name change.
4. Affidavits or sworn statements of two or more persons
attesting to the name change.
IV.
One Document of Evidence of Guardianship
If you are executing this document for the person identified as
eligible, you must submit evidence of your authority.
If you are the legally-appointed guardian, committee, or other
legally-designated representative of such an individual, the
evidence shall be a certificate executed by the proper official of
the court appointment.
If you are not such a legally-designated representative, the
evidence shall be an affidavit describing your relationship to the
recipient or the extent to which you have the care of the recipient
or your position as an officer of the institution in which the
recipient is institutionalized.
Form B: Declaration of Verification by Persons Identified as
Statutory Heirs by the Office of Redress Administration U.S.
Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Office of Redress
Administration
This declaration shall be executed by the spouse of a deceased
eligible individual as statutory heir in accordance with section
105(a)(7) of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, 50 U.S.C. app.
1989b.
Complete the following information:
(1) Current Legal Name: (2) Current Address: Street: City, State
and Zip Code: (3) Telephone Number: (Home) (Business) (4) Social
Security Number: (5) Date of Birth: (6) Relationship to the
Deceased: (8) Date of marriage to the Deceased:
Read the following carefully before signing this document.
A False Statement may be grounds for punishment by fine (U.S.
Code, title 31, section 3729), and fine or imprisonment or both
(U.S. Code, title 18, sections 287 and section 1001).
I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true
and correct.
Signature Date
Privacy Act Statement: The authority for collecting this
information is contained in 50 U.S.C. app. 1989b. The information
that you provide will be used principally for verifying eligible
persons for payment under the restitution provision of the Civil
Liberties Act of 1988.
Required Documentation: The following documentation must be
submitted with the above Declaration to complete your
verification.
DOCUMENTATION: I.
One Document as Evidence of the Deceased
Eligible Individual's Death
1. A certified copy or extract from the public records of death,
coroner's report of death, or verdict of a coroner's jury.
2. A certificate by the custodian of the public record of
death.
3. A statement of the funeral director or attending physician,
or intern of the institution where death occurred.
4. A certified copy, or extract from an official report or
finding of death made by an agency or department of the United
States.
5. If death occurred outside the United States, an official
report of death by a United States Consul or other employee of the
State Department, or a copy of public record of death in the
foreign country.
6. If you cannot obtain any of the above evidence of your
spouse's death, you must submit other convincing evidence to ORA
such as the signed statements of two or more people with personal
knowledge of the death, giving the place, date, and cause of
death.
II.
One Document as Evidence of Your Marriage to the
Deceased Eligible Individual
1. A copy of the public records of marriage, certified or
attested, or an abstract of the public records, containing
sufficient data to identify the parties, the date and place of
marriage, and the number of prior marriages by either party if
shown on the official record, issued by the officer having custody
of the record or other public official authorized to certify the
record, or a certified copy of the religious record of
marriage.
2. An offical report from a public agency as to a marriage which
occurred while the deceased eligible individual who was employed by
such agency.
3. The affidavit of the clergyman or magistrate who
officiated.
4. The certified copy of a certificate of marriage attested to
by the custodian of the records.
5. The affidavits or sworn statements of two or more
eyewitnesses to the ceremony.
6. In jurisdictions where “Common Law” marriages are recognized,
the affidavits or certified statements of the spouse setting forth
all of the facts and circumstances concerning the alleged marriage,
such as the agreement between the parties at the beginning of their
cohabitation, places and dates of residences, and whether children
were born as the result of the relationship. This evidence should
be supplemented by affidavits or certified statements from two or
more persons who know as the result of personal observation the
reputed relationship which existed between the parties to the
alleged marriage, including the period of cohabitation, places of
residences, whether the parties held themselves out as husband and
wife and whether they were generally accepted as such in the
communities in which they lived.
7. Any other evidence which would reasonably support a belief by
the Administrator that a valid marriage actually existed.
III. Identification
A document with your current legal name and address. For
example, you might send a bank or financial statement or a monthly
utility bill. Submit either a notarized copy of the record or an
original that you do not need back.
IV.
One Document of Date of Birth
A certified copy of a birth certificate or a copy of another
record of birth that has been certified by the custodian of the
records. For example, you might send a copy of a religious record
which shows your date of birth, or a hospital birth record. If you
do not have any record of your birth, the Administrator will accept
affidavits of two or more persons attesting to the date of your
birth.
If your notification letter says that the Social Security
Administration has confirmed your date of brith, you do not
have to send us any further evidence of your birth date.
V.
One Document of Name Change
If your current legal last name is the same as the last name of
the deceased eligible individual or the same as at the time of
marriage this section does not apply.
This section is only required for persons whose current legal
last name is different from the last name of the deceased
eligible.
1. A certified copy of the public record of marriage.
2. A certified copy of the divorce decree.
3. A certified copy of the court order of a name change.
4. Affidavits or sworn statements of two or more persons
attesting to the name change.
VI.
One Document of Evidence of Guardianship
If you are executing this document for the person identified as
eligible, you must submit evidence of your authority.
If you are the legally-appointed guardian, committee, or other
legally-designated representative of such an individual, the
evidence shall be a certificate executed by the proper official of
the court appointment.
If you are not such a legally-designated representative, the
evidence shall be an affidavit describing your relationship to the
recipient or the extent to which you have the care of the recipient
or your position as an officer of the institution in which the
recipient is institutionalized.
Form C: Declaration of Verification by Persons Identified by the
Office of Redress Administration as Statutory Heirs U.S. Department
of Justice Civil Rights Division Office of Redress Administration
This declaration shall be executed by the child of a deceased
eligible individual as a statutory heir in accordance with section
105(a)(7) of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, 50 U.S.C. app.
1988b.
Complete the following information:
(1) Current Legal Name: (2) Current Address: Street: City, State
and Zip Code: (3) Telephone Number: (Home) (Business) (4) Social
Security Number: (5) Date of Birth: (6) Relationship to the
Deceased: (7) List the names and address (if known) of all other
children of the deceased eligible individual. This includes all
recognized natural children, step-children who lived with the
deceased eligible and adopted children. Enter the date of death for
any persons who are deceased.
Read the following carefully before signing this document. A
False Statement may be grounds for punishment by fine (U.S. Code,
title 31, section 3729), and fine or imprisonment or both (U.S.
Code, title 18, section 287 and section 1001).
I declare under penalty or perjury that the foregoing is true
and correct.
Signature Date
Privacy Act Statement: The authority for collecting this
information is contained in 50 U.S.C. app. 1989b. The information
that you provide will be used principally for verifying eligible
persons for payment under the restitution provision of the Civil
Liberties Act of 1988.
Required Documentation for Children of Deceased Eligible Individual
The following documentation must be submitted with the above
Declaration to complete your verification.
DOCUMENTATION: I.
One Document as Evidence of Your Parent's
Death
1. A certified copy or extract from the public records of death,
coroner's report of death, or verdict of a coroner's jury.
2. A certificate by the custodian of the public record of
death.
3. A statement of the funeral director or attending physician,
or intern of the institution where death occurred.
4. A certified copy, or extract from an official report or
finding of death made by an agency or department of the United
States.
5. If death occurred outside the United States, an official
report of death by a United States Consul or other employee of the
State Department, or a copy of public record of death in the
foreign country.
6. If you cannot obtain any of the above evidence of your
parent's death, you must submit other convincing evidence to ORA
such as the signed statements of two or more people with personal
knowledge of the death, giving the place, date, and cause of
death.
II.
One Document as Evidence of Your Relationship to Your
Parent Natural Child
1. A certified copy of a birth certificate showing that the
deceased eligible individual was your parent.
2. If the birth certificate does not show the deceased eligible
individual as your parent, other proof would be a certified copy
of:
(a) An acknowledgment in writing signed by the deceased eligible
individual.
(b) A judicial decree ordering the deceased eligible individual
to contribute to your support or for other purposes.
(c) A certified copy of the public record of birth or a
religious record showing that the deceased eligible individual was
the informant and was named as your parent.
(d) Affidavits or sworn statements of a person who knows that
the deceased eligible individual accepted the child as his or
hers.
(e) A record obtained from a public agency or public records,
such as school or welfare agencies, which shows that with the
deceased eligible individual's knowledge, the deceased eligible
individual was named as the parent of the child.
Adopted Child
Evidence of the relationship by an adopted child must be shown
by a certified copy of the decree of adoption. In jurisdictions
where petition must be made to the court for release of adoption
documents or information, or where the release of such documents or
information is prohibited, a revised birth certificate will be
sufficient to establish the fact of adoption.
Step-Child
Submit all three as evidence of the step-child
relationship.
1. One document as evidence of birth to the spouse of the
deceased eligible individual as listed under the “natural child”
and “adoptive child” sections to show that you were born to or
adopted by the deceased individual's spouse, or other evidence
which reasonably supports the existence of a parent-child
relationship between you and the spouse of the deceased eligible
person.
2. One document as evidence that you were either living with or
in a parent-child relationship with the deceased eligible
individual at the time of the eligible individual's death.
3. One document as evidence of the marriage of the deceased
eligible individual and the spouse, such as a copy of the record of
marriage, certified or attested, or by an abstract of the public
records, containing sufficient data to identify the parties and the
date and place of marriage issued by the officer having custody of
the record, or a certified copy of a religious record of
marriage.
III. Identification
A document with your current legal name and address. For
example, you might send a bank or financial statement, or a monthly
utility bill. Submit either a notarized copy of the record or an
original that you do not want back.
IV.
One Document of Date of Birth
A certified copy of a birth certificate or a copy of another
record of birth that has been certified by the custodian of the
records. For example, you might send a copy of a religious record
which shows your date of birth, or a hospital birth record. If you
do not have any record of your birth, the Administrator will accept
affidavits of two or more persons attesting to the date of your
birth.
If your notification letter says that the Social Security
Administration has confirmed your date of birth, you do not
have to send us any further evidence of your birth date.
V.
One Document of Name Change
If your current legal last name is the same as the last name of
the deceased eligible, this section does not apply.
This section is only required for persons whose current legal
last name is different from the last name of the deceased
eligible.
Submit one of the following as evidence of the change of
legal name.
1. A certified copy of the public record of marriage.
2. A certified copy of the divorce decree.
3. A certified copy of the court order of a name change.
4. Affidavits or sworn statements of two or more persons
attesting to the name change.
VI.
One Document of Evidence of Guardianship
If your are executing this document for the person identified as
an eligible beneficiary, you must submit evidence of your
authority.
If you are a legally-appointed guardian, committee, or other
legally-designated representative of such an individual, the
evidence shall be a certificate executed by the proper official of
the court appointment.
If you are not such a legally-designated representative, the
evidence shall be an affidavit describing your relationship to the
recipient or the extent to which you have the care of the recipient
or your position as an officer of the institution in which the
recipient is institutionalized.
Form D:
Declaration of Verification by Persons Identified by the Office
of Redress Administration as Statutory Heirs
U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Office of
Redress Administration
This declaration shall be executed by the identified parent of a
deceased eligible individual as statutory heir in accordance
with
Section 105(a)(7) of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, 50 U.S.C.
app. 1989b. Complete the following information: (1) Current Legal
Name: (2) Current Address: Street: City, State and Zip Code: (3)
Telephone Number: (Home) (Business) (4) Social Security Number: (5)
Date of Birth: (6) Relationship to the Deceased: (7) The name of
the child's other parent and the address if known. This includes
fathers and mothers through adoption. If the parent is deceased
provide the date and place of death.
Read the following carefully before signing this document. A
False Statement may be grounds for punishment by fine (U.S. Code,
title 31, section 3729), and fine or imprisonment or both (U.S.
Code, title 18, section 287 and section 1001).
I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and
correct. Signature Date Privacy Act Statement: The authority for
collecting this information is contained in 50 U.S.C. app. 1989b.
The information that you provide will be used principally for
verifying eligible persons for payment under the restitution
provision of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988. Required
Documentation.
The following documentation must be submitted with the above
Declaration to complete your verification.
DOCUMENTATION: I.
One Document as Evidence of Your Child's
Death
1. A certified copy or extract from the public records of death,
coroner's report of death, or verdict of a coroner's jury.
2. A certificate by the custodian of the public record of
death.
3. A statement of the funeral director or attending physician,
or intern of the institution where death occurred.
4. A certified copy, or extract from an official report or
finding of death made by an agency or department of the United
States.
5. If death occurred outside the United States, an official
report of death by a United States Consul or othe employee of the
State Department, or a copy of public record of death in the
foreign country.
6. If you cannot obtain any of the above evidence, you must
submit other convincing evidence to ORA such as the signed
statements of two or more people with personal knowledge of the
death, giving the place, date, and cause of death.
II.
One Document as Evidence of Your Parent-Child
Relationship Natural Parent
1. A certified copy of a birth certificate that shows you to be
the deceased eligible individual's parent.
2. A certified acknowledgment in writing signed by you before
the eligible individual's death.
3. Any other evidence which reasonably supports a finding of
such a parent-child relationship, such as a certified copy of the
public record of birth or a religious record showing that you were
the informant and were named as the parent of the deceased eligible
individual.
4. Affidavits or sworn statements of persons who know that you
had accepted the deceased eligible individual as his or her
child.
5. Information obtained from a public agency or public records,
such as school or welfare agencies, which shows that with the
deceased eligible individual's knowledge, you were named as
parent.
Adoptive Parent
1. A certified copy of the decree of adoption and such other
evidence as may be necessary.
2. In jurisdictions where petition must be made to the court for
release of such documents or information, or where release of such
documents or information is prohibited, a revised birth certificate
showing the person as the deceased eligible individual's parent
will suffice.
III. Identification
A document with your current legal name and address. For
example, you might send a bank or financial statement, or a monthly
utility bill. Submit either a notarized copy or an original that
you do not need back.
IV.
One Document of Date of Birth
A certified copy of a birth certificate or a copy of another
record of birth that has been certified by the custodian of the
records. For example, you might send a copy of a religious record
which shows your date of birth, or a hospital birth record. If you
do not have any record of your birth, the Administrator will accept
affidavits of two or more persons attesting to the date of your
birth.
If your notification letter says that the Social Security
Administration has confirmed your date of birth, you do not
have to send any further evidence of your birth date.
V.
One Document of Name Change
If your current legal last name is the same as the last name of
the deceased eligible individual this section does not apply.
This section is only required for persons whose current legal
last name is different from the last name of the deceased
eligible.
1. A certified copy of the public record of marriage.
2. A certified copy of the divorce decree.
3. A certified copy of the court order of a name change.
4. Affidavits or sworn statements of two or more persons
attesting to the name change.
VI.
One Document of Evidence of Guardianship
If you are executing this document for the person identified as
eligible, you must submit evidence of your authority.
If you are the legally-appointed guardian, committee, or other
legally-designated representative of such an individual, the
evidence shall be a certificate executed by the proper official of
the court appointment.
If you are not such a legally-designated representative, the
evidence shall be an affidavit describing your relationship to the
recipient or the extent to which you have the care of the recipient
or your position as an officer of the institution in which the
recipient is institutionalized.